East is East
T. C. Boyle
For Georges and Anne Borchardt
Those who wish to live horribly and die horribly are choosing a beautiful way of life.
—Yukio Mishima,
“Bred and bawn in de briar patch, Br’er Fox, bred and bawn.”
—Joel Chandler Harris,
Contents
Part I: Tupelo Island
Small Matters
The
Thanatopsis House
Hog Hammock
The Squarest People in the World
Queen Bee
Behind a Wall of Glass
Rusu
The Other Half
Still at Large
Parfait in Chrome
The Dogs Are Barking, Woof-Woof
Part II: The Okefenokee
Everybody’s Secret
Four Walls
The Whiteness of the Fish
A Jungle
Where the Earth Trembles
Tender Sproats
Cheap Thrills
The Power of the Human Voice
Part III: Port of Savannah
Journalism
The City of Brotherly Love
Acknowledgments
A Note on the Author
Also available by T. C. Boyle
By the Same Author
Tupelo Island
Small Matters
He was swimming, rotating from front to back, thrashing his arms and legs and puffing out his cheeks, and it seemed as if he’d been swimming forever. He did the crawl, the breaststroke, the Yokohama kick. Tiring, he clung to the cork life ring like some shapeless creature of the depths, a pale certificate of flesh. Sometime during the fifth hour, he began to think of soup.
When the sun went down, taking all the color with it and leaving behind a surface as hard and cold as hammered pewter, his tongue was swollen in his throat and the deepest yearnings of his gut gnawed at him like imperious little animals. His hands were bloated and raw, the life ring chafed at his arms, gulls swooped close to appraise him with their professional eyes. He might have given up. Might have eased into the dream of bed and supper and home, slipping into the broth of the sea centimeter by centimeter until the ring floated free and the anonymous waves closed over him. But he resisted. He thought of Mishima and Jocho and the book he’d taped round his chest, beneath the now limp and sodden turtleneck. Enfolded in a panoply of Ziploc bags, bound to him with black electrical tape and repository of four odd green little American bills, it tugged at the place where his heart beat.
Of course, at the same time, he knew he would make it, which made Jocho’s advice a lot easier to stomach. It wasn’t only the birds—the pelicans and cormorants and gulls beating west to their roosts—but the smell of the shore that told him as much. Sailors talk of the sweet wafting odor of the landfall that awakens them thirty miles out to sea, but on this, his maiden voyage, he’d never noticed it. Not on board the